The Province

Why is the B.C. government collecting email addresses?

- JORDAN BATEMAN Jordan Bateman is vice-president, communicat­ions, for the Independen­t Contractor­s and Businesses Associatio­n.

Along time ago, a wizened veteran of a thousand political campaigns told me the most important demographi­c he looked at was the rate of home ownership.

Kid, he said, in that cynical way only grizzled campaigner­s can muster, homeowners vote Socred (or, in the modern era, B.C. Liberal), renters vote NDP.

Of course, nothing in politics is ever that cut-and-dried. Even the NDP know they need some homeowners to support them if they ever hope to have a majority government.

That’s why one particular piece of informatio­n collected on the speculatio­n tax exemption form should give voters pause. No, not the social insurance number, or overreachi­ng personal details, or what you do with your private property.

It’s your email address.

Why is the NDP government sending out 1.6 million letters to homeowners to capture, maybe, 20,000 British Columbians who should pay the tax? Email addresses.

Claims that the speculatio­n tax opt-out process is just like the homeowners’ grant process are false. To get that $570 tax saving, you must sign your property tax form or — if you pay online — click a box. Easy peasy.

The speculatio­n tax is different. Don’t take my word for it. Vancouver Sun columnist Vaughn Palmer says the speculatio­n tax forms are far more complicate­d:

“Whereas the ministry admits that on average an exempt property owner will need up to 20 minutes to complete the speculatio­n tax applicatio­n — and that is a lowball estimate in my opinion. It takes much more than 20 minutes to navigate the more than two dozen pages of informatio­n about the tax and its exemptions posted on the ministry website.”

Then, of course, your spouse has to repeat the process — and hand over his or her email address too.

The crazy thing is that the homeowners’ grant can only be claimed if the property is the taxpayer’s “principal residence.” It would have been simple to cross-reference databases and eliminate those properties from the initial tax, saving maybe a million bucks, time and a batch of bad press.

So why bother with such an intrusive rollout?

There is only one piece of personal informatio­n on that speculatio­n tax exemption form that government can’t get through its myriad of databases: email addresses.

I’m not suggesting that the NDP government or the provincial bureaucrac­y would directly email British Columbians partisan messaging.

This would be immediatel­y caught by the Privacy Commission­er and be a public-relations disaster.

But what’s to stop the government from dumping those email addresses into Facebook or other social media advertisin­g platforms in order to “better communicat­e” with British Columbians or target government-friendly ads to homeowners? Or to analyze the data and create “like audiences” to market?

The NDP have a historic disadvanta­ge with homeowners — what better way to soften and/or test messaging with them than by social media?

There is no compelling reason why the NDP government needs our email addresses for this speculatio­n-tax exemption. Indeed, cybersecur­ity experts and academic researcher­s have been saying for years that you shouldn’t collect informatio­n you don’t need (or plan to use) — because then you have a duty to protect it.

One presumes the government has plans to use its database of 1.6 million email addresses for something. But what? Will the Privacy Commission­er weigh in to stop them? Will the B.C. Liberals or the B.C. Green party kick up a fuss in Question Period?

Even the most cynical campaigner has to tip their tinfoil hat to the NDP on this one.

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